…and they’re awesome! Not sure where they got the budget or the resources to come up with such an elaborate hoax (they’re likely a visual artist?), but they definitely are making a statement about the state of America in 2015. Check out the brutal ads featuring Tony The Tiger below! They’rrrrre GREAT! Check out TONYISBACK.com for more info.

No? Well, us neither but someone did so they opened up their Photoshop and went there. Writers Holly Eagleson and Lauren Wade remade a selection of controversial ads as part an essay on sexism for Take Part. The pair switched the gender of the models in several high-profile fashion campaigns, and suddelyl the male portrayals of the models in these positions landed somewhere in between creepy and ridiculously stupid!

Nudity-ridden campaigns shot by notorious fashion photographer Terry Richardson took center stage, for brands including American Apparel and Tom Ford, as well as a Marc Jacobs ad shot by Jeurgen Teller featuring Victoria Beckham.
‘I think as a whole we’ve just gotten used to seeing women depicted this way, and the only way we can change it is if we stop staying silent and demand change,’ Ms Wade told The Huffington Post.
The work of Terry Richardson however, is far from funny according to the writer duo. They point particularly to his frequent collaborations with clothing giant American Apparel, which have resulted in several campaigns of questionable taste.

There are far more awful things to get worked up about than a bunch of Brazilian GILFs that just wanna bone for a living — but folks in Brazil are apparently up in arms about these advertisements supporting their trade.
What are your thoughts on it? The only REAL controversy here should be that shirt on the right! It definitely was stolen from my friend Keeara, the candy raver in my 8th grade math class.
[via hispanically speaking news]

The context of seeing these ads placed next to a photo of an unwaxed nipple can’t help but make us laugh!
Australian Grindr users experienced a unique marketing strategy from Christian company GodLife over the Easter weekend while they were logged-in and cruising for a piece.